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The Pope's Left-Turn on Immigration
FrontPageMagazine.com ^ | December 10, 2002 | Jim Kalb

Posted on 12/11/2002 4:21:53 PM PST by Dajjal

THE POPE’S LEFT-TURN ON IMMIGRATION

by Jim Kalb

FrontPageMagazine.com | December 10, 2002

Here's the Pope's message for the World Day of Migrants and Refugees, which I gather is an annual event in the Catholic Church: "To Overcome Racism, Xenophobia and Exaggerated Nationalism". What he says is in one sense typical -- it follows the line all respectable Christian religious leaders now follow -- but in another sense quite extraordinary:

What does all this add up to?

First, it appears that every country should have open borders. If they aren't open, some migrants will be undocumented and therefore become the special objects of hospitality and care. But if we have to welcome and care for them anyway, why not make it official and give all comers papers at the border?

Second, the flood of immigrants should be welcomed by local communities just as they are, and truly accepted in their cultural diversity. No boundaries of any kind may be drawn, because even the hint of a boundary would be latent discrimination. The Catholic Church should use its vast resources to inculcate such attitudes, and work with others to spread them through society generally. That, as all "social concerns" bureaucrats agree, is the prophetic function of the Church.

But what of the local culture? The Pope "also invite[s] the immigrants to recognize the duty to honor the countries which receive them and to respect the laws, culture, and traditions of the people who have welcomed them." So it appears the net effect is to be a world without boundaries of any kind, in which each is equally present to all others and each respects and honors the particularities of all.

By calling for such a thing the Pope is saying nothing new but simply repeating with his usual intellectual and moral fervor the view all official moral teachers hold today. What he and other moral teachers leave unexplained, however, is how the particularities that are to be honored will be able to exist as anything but individual idiosycrasies in a world utterly without boundaries in which no culture is authoritative because each is equally present and equally honored.

The short answer is that they won't. A culture is a particular complex of habits, understandings and loyalties that are normative although mostly unstated among a particular group of people. As such, it requires boundaries. A culture can exist as a culture only among a group of people who have grown into it together and feel that among themselves they can take it for granted. Such conditions cannot exist in a group that feels obligated to be utterly and continuously open to numerous new arrivals, avoiding even latent discrimination, and called to honor them in all their otherness.

What the Pope is calling for is therefore not the honoring of culture but the abolition of culture by the abolition of every social setting in which any particular culture can exist. Surely that is wrong. A culture is a mode of being human, and is always particular. Because man is a social animal, participation in culture -- and therefore in a particular culture -- is necessary for a fully human life. If it weren't needed, why all the talk in the Church about "inculturation"?

The odd thing is that the Pope seems to understand the problem. He says "The path to true acceptance of immigrants in their cultural diversity is actually a difficult one, in some cases a real Way of the Cross." He's quite right. The Way of the Cross is the way of giving up everything that we have and by which we live. The proposed approach to migration does involve something rather like that.

I suppose the question I would put as a citizen is whether something that involves the Way of the Cross -- whatever its spiritual benefits for a man like the Pope -- can be justified as public policy. Because as a practical matter the destruction of particular culture is much less likely to lead to the vibrant communities of which the Pope speaks than to tyranny, brutishness and mutual hatred.
__________

Jim Kalb is a lawyer and independent scholar whose essays on politics and culture appear in periodicals in the United States and abroad. He holds a J.D. for Yale Law School and a B.A. from Dartmouth college. Visit his weblogView from the Right or email at kalb@aya.yale.edu.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: immigration; inculturation; johnpaulii; pope

1 posted on 12/11/2002 4:22:01 PM PST by Dajjal
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To: Salvation; maryz; narses; ultima ratio; Bud McDuell; traditionalist; yendu bwam; Mike Fieschko; ...
ping
2 posted on 12/11/2002 4:23:52 PM PST by Dajjal
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To: Dajjal
I wouldn't get in a sweat about it. This isn't a matter of faith and morals or official Church doctrine. It's what is known as a prudential judgment, what the Pope thinks is best. Catholics are free to disagree.
3 posted on 12/11/2002 4:42:41 PM PST by Cicero
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To: Dajjal
When the Pontiff opens Vatican City to immigration, he'll have standing on this issue.
4 posted on 12/11/2002 6:45:18 PM PST by Always A Marine
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To: Dajjal
The writer misinterprets the Pope's statements. We are to welcome immigrants, legal or illegal, AS CHRISTIANS AND AS FELLOW HUMAN BEINGS. That doesn't mean we should change the laws to mandate "open borders", it means that if the man in the pew behind you is an illegal immigrant, you still shake his hand, and if he shows up at the soup kitchen in the church basement that you are volunteering for, you feed him.

It's not that difficult a distinction.

5 posted on 12/11/2002 8:05:33 PM PST by VeritatisSplendor
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